Masters Theses in the Pure and Applied Sciences


Book Description

Masters Theses in the Pure and Applied Sciences was first conceived, published, and disseminated by the Center for Information and Numerical Data Analysis and Synthesis (CINDAS) * at Purdue University in 1 957, starting its coverage of theses with the academic year 1955. Beginning with Volume 13, the printing and dissemination phases of the activity were transferred to University Microfilms/Xerox of Ann Arbor, Michigan, with the thought that such an arrangement would be more beneficial to the academic and general scientific and technical community. After five years of this joint undertaking we had concluded that it was in the interest of all con cerned if the printing and distribution of the volumes were handled by an interna tional publishing house to assure improved service and broader dissemination. Hence, starting with Volume 18, Masters Theses in the Pure and Applied Sciences has been disseminated on a worldwide basis by Plenum Publishing Cor poration of New York, and in the same year the coverage was broadened to include Canadian universities. All back issues can also be ordered from Plenum. We have reported in Volume 36 (thesis year 1991) a total of 11,024 thesis titles from 23 Canadian and 161 United States universities. We are sure that this broader base for these titles reported will greatly enhance the value of this important annual reference work. While Volume 36 reports theses submitted in 1991, on occasion, certain univer sities do report theses submitted in previous years but not reported at the time.




Flow Boiling in Microgap Channels


Book Description

Flow Boiling in Microgap Channels: Experiment, Visualization and Analysis presents an up-to-date summary of the details of the confined to unconfined flow boiling transition criteria, flow boiling heat transfer and pressure drop characteristics, instability characteristics, two phase flow pattern and flow regime map and the parametric study of microgap dimension. Advantages of flow boiling in microgaps over microchannels are also highlighted. The objective of this Brief is to obtain a better fundamental understanding of the flow boiling processes, compare the performance between microgap and conventional microchannel heat sinks, and evaluate the microgap heat sink for instabilities and hotspot mitigation.




Enhanced Boiling Heat Transfer


Book Description

This is a comprehensive survey of boiling heat transfer augmentation, one of the most dynamic areas in the field. The text covers fundamental aspects of boiling augmentation and provides an in-depth treatment of enhanced boiling surface applications in industry.




Flow Boiling in Expanding Microchannels


Book Description

This Brief presents an up to date summary of details of the flow boiling heat transfer, pressure drop and instability characteristics; two phase flow patterns of expanding microchannels. Results obtained from the different expanding microscale geometries are presented for comparison and addition to that, comparison with literatures is also performed. Finally, parametric studies are performed and presented in the brief. The findings from this study could help in understanding the complex microscale flow boiling behavior and aid in the design and implementation of reliable compact heat sinks for practical applications.




ITHERM


Book Description




Masters Theses in the Pure and Applied Sciences


Book Description

Volume 36 reports (for thesis year 1991) a total of 11,024 thesis titles from 23 Canadian and 161 US universities. The organization of the volume, as in past years, consists of thesis titles arranged by discipline, and by university within each discipline. The titles are contributed by any and all a




Investigation of Flow Boiling Phenomena in Small-scale Complex Geometries


Book Description

This study concerns measurement and prediction of single-phase and flow boiling heat transfer coefficients and pressure drops in mini multi-channel geometries with and without interconnecting passages, including plate channel; parallel channel; in-line pin-fin and in-line off-set pin-fin surfaces. Experiments were performed with refrigerant R113 and deionised water at atmospheric pressure. Single-phase and flow boiling heat transfer coefficients and pressure drops were obtained over a range of effective heat fluxes and mass fluxes. For the plate and parallel channel surfaces, the results obtained have been compared with several published macro- and micro-channels correlations. For the in-line and in-line off-set pin fin surfaces, as the geometries have some similarities with tube bundles, the results obtained have been predicted using the standard correlations for tube bundles. The results also have been compared with several existing correlations developed based on macro-scale tube bundles and micro-pin-fin surfaces data. The saturated flow boiling heat transfer coefficients for the parallel channel and pin-fin surfaces were similar to within the experimental uncertainty, and considerably higher than the plate channel values, all dependent on heat flux and reasonably independent of mass flux and vapour mass fraction. This indicated that the dominant heat-transfer mechanism in the saturated boiling flow regime was nucleate boiling for all surfaces. The parallel channel, in-line and off-set pin-fin surfaces improved heat transfer by increasing the surface area and the heat transfer coefficient in comparison with the plate channel surface. The two-phase pressure drops in the parallel channel and pin-fin surfaces were considerably larger than that for the plate channel surface. Thus, the reduction in wall temperature is achieved by a significant pressure drop penalty. For the pin-fin surfaces, at low vapour qualities the heat transfer coefficients were in reasonable agreement with the conventional scale tube bundles correlations however as the vapour quality increases, the correlations were not able to predict the heat transfer coefficient as unlike the conventionally-sized tube bundles, the convective enhancement does not happen in the mini-pin-fin surfaces tested. The nucleate pool boiling correlation of Cooper (1984) provided a good agreement with the data for all surfaces tests with R113 and deionised water. The measured two-phase pressure drops for both pin-fin surfaces tests with R113 and deionised water were in a good agreement with the predicted values obtained from standard correlations for tube bundles, indicating pressure drop methods maybe transferable.




AN EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF THE EFFECTS OF SURFACE CONDITIONS ON POOL-BOILING HEAT TRANSFER FOR VARIOUS MATERIALS.


Book Description

In this research, minimum film boiling temperature (Tmin) is quantitatively determined as a function of the initial substrate temperature, liquid subcooling, surface thermophysical properties and surface conditions. Since Tmin defines the boundary between the film and transition boiling regimes, its value is significant for the design of an emergency core cooling system following a hypothetical loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) in a nuclear power plant. When a sufficiently heated surface is plunged in a water pool, a vapor blanket is generated around the test section acting as a heat transfer insulator due to the poor thermal conductivity of the vapor. At temperatures lower than Tmin, the heat transfer is dramatically enhanced owing the collapse of the vapor film allowing direct physical contact between the water and the heated surface. Therefore, it is very important to explore methods and techniques that increase this temperature in order to improve the safety of nuclear reactors. A test facility was designed and constructed to conduct quenching experiments using vertical rods. Seven cylindrical test samples were fabricated with embedded thermocouples inside the cladding material. The thermocouples were connected to a data acquisition system in order to measure the temperature history during the experiments. The temperature and heat flux at the surface were calculated using an inverse heat conduction code along with an advance image processing technique to quantitatively characterize the liquid-vapor interfacial waves, vapor layer thickness, Tmin, quenching temperature, quenching time, and quench front velocity in the film boiling heat transfer regime. Visualization of the boiling behavior was captured by a high-speed camera at a frame rate of 750 frames per second (fps). The thermocouple data and the captured videos were synchronized to couple the behavior of the vapor layer with the thermal behavior of the heated sample. Various characterization techniques including X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) associated with Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), and field emission scanning electron were employed to identify the phases, chemical composition, and surface microstructure of the Inconel-600 before and after being used in a 7 x 7 rod bundle facility. Micro- and nanoparticles composed of nickel, chromium, and iron oxides were observed at the surface of the oxidized Inconel samples. It was found that the porous microstructure coupled with the increase in liquid spreading played a significant role in the enhancement of the film boiling heat transfer. Finally, the heat transfer behavior in the film boiling regime was investigated by calculating the heat transfer coefficient and Nusselt number for various cases. The novelty of this research is the coupling between the results of the quenching experiments and the surface characterization analyses that prompted the development of a new correlation for Tmin. This correlation adequately captures the effects of liquid subcooling, porosity of the oxide layer, and system pressure.




Exploring the Limits of Boiling and Evaporative Heat Transfer Using Micro/Nano Structures


Book Description

This dissertation presents a study exploring the limits of phase-change heat transfer with the aim of enhancing critical heat flux (CHF) in pool boiling and enhancing thermal conductance in heat pipes. The state-of-the-art values of the CHF in pool boiling and the thermal conductance in heat pipes are about two orders of magnitudes smaller than the limits predicted by kinetic theory. Consequently, there seems to be plenty of room for improvement. Pool boiling refers to boiling at a surface immersed in an extensive motionless pool of liquid. Its process includes heterogeneous nucleation, growth, mergence and detachment of vapor bubbles on a heating surface. It is generally agreed that the high heat transfer coefficient of boiling could be explained by the concept of single-phase forced convection, i.e., the motion of bubbles agitating surrounding liquid is similar to the process in single-phase forced convection. The occurrence of CHF results from a formation of a vapor film on the heater surface, which reduces the thermal conductance drastically and causes a huge temperature rise on the surface. Over the past few decades, researchers were struggling to identify the exact mechanism causing CHF. General observations are that both surface properties and pool hydrodynamics could affect the values of CHF. Nanowire array-coated surfaces having a large capillary force are employed to enhance the CHF. It has been shown that CHFs on the nanowire array-coated surface could be doubled compared to the values on a plain surface. The obtained CHF of 224 ± 6.60 W/cm̂2 on the nanowire-array coated surface is one of the highest values reported in the boiling heat transfer. To further enhance CHF, the mechanisms that govern CHF have been systematically explored. Experimental results show that the CHF on the nanowire array-coated surface are not limited by the capillary force. Instead, the CHF are dependent on the heater size. Corresponding experiments on plain surfaces with various heater sizes also exhibits similar heater-size dependence. The CHFs on nanowire array-coated surfaces and plain surfaces are consistent with the predictions of the hydrodynamic theory while a higher CHF is obtained on the nanowire array-coated surface as compared to the plain Si surface. This suggests that the CHFs are a result of the pool hydrodynamics while surface properties modify the corresponding hydrodynamic limits. A heat pipe is a device that transports thermal energy in a very small temperature difference and thereby producing a very large thermal conductance. It relies on evaporation of liquid at the heated end of the pipe, flow of vapor between the heated and cooled end, condensation at the other end, and capillary-driven liquid flow through a porous wick between the condenser and the evaporation. The large latent heat involved in evaporation and condensation leads to very large heat flows for a small temperature drop along the heat pipe. Despite the large thermal conductance, their operation is limited by such factors as capillary limit, boiling limit, sonic limit and entrainment limit, etc. Among these operational limits, capillary and boiling limits are most frequently encountered. The capillary limit determines the maximum flow rate provided by the capillary force of the wick structure whereas boiling limit is referred to a condition that liquid supply is blocked by vapor bubbles in the wick. Consequently, the wick structure is the key component in a heat pipe, which determines the maximum capillary force and the dominant thermal resistance. In a heat pipe using evaporation as the dominant heat transfer mechanism, a thin liquid film (̃ a few microns) extended from the solid structure in the wick causes the dominant thermal resistance. Therefore, if one reduces the pore size of a porous media, the thermal conductance could be enhanced by increasing the surface area of the thin liquid film. On the other hand, the classical thermodynamics depicts that the superheat required for evaporation is inversely proportional to the equilibrium radius of the meniscus. Consequently, enhancing thermal conductance via increasing the thin film area is contradictory to the effect of evaporation suppression for small pores. A hierarchical wick structure with multiple length scales that enhances dry-out heat flux and thermal conductance simultaneously in heat pipes was demonstrated. This hierarchical wick structure is composed of a large microchannel array to reduce flow resistance and small pin-fin arrays to provide a large capillary force. The enhancement of thermal conductance is achieved via a large number of pin-fins for increasing the total thin film area. A thermal conductance defined by the slope of the curve of ̃16.28 ± 1.33 W/cm̂2-K and a dry-out heat flux of 228.85 ± 10.73 W/cm̂2 were achieved by this design. Further, vapor transport resistance is minimized within the aligned-multi-scale wick structure. As a result, this wick does not pose a boiling limit. Artificial cavities were created in the wick structure to take the advantage of the high heat transfer coefficient of boiling heat transfer. The wick with artificial cavities successfully triggers boiling at a lower wall temperature resulting in a conductance of 9.02 ± 0.04 W/cm̂2-K compared to an evaporation mode of 3.54 ± 0.01 W/cm̂2-K. For a given heat flux, the wick with cavities effectively reduce wall temperature compared to a wick without cavities. Our experimental results display an enhancement of thermal conductance by using boiling heat transfer. This opens up a new direction for further enhancing thermal conductance in heat pipes by circumventing the limit in the evaporative heat transfer regime, in which further increase in surface area will eventually result in evaporation suppression in small pores.